Theron, Jenkins [and Ricci] get to the heart of the matter, which is that this criminal is a badly damaged human. We deeply feel that healing requires more than lip service.
Monster (2003)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:177
Fresh:146
Rotten:31
Average Rating:7.2/10
Consensus: Charlize Theron dominates this stirring, brutal film with a break through performance.
Runtime: 1 hr 50 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: In a revelatory performance, Charlize Theron stars in the shocking and moving true-life story of Aileen Wuornos, a prostitute executed last year in Florida after being convicted of murdering six... In a revelatory performance, Charlize Theron stars in the shocking and moving true-life story of Aileen Wuornos, a prostitute executed last year in Florida after being convicted of murdering six men. While Wuornos confessed to the six murders, including a policeman, she claimed to have killed only in self-defense, resisting violent assaults while working as a prostitute. Bravely burrowing beneath the tabloid headlines about America’s first female serial killer—and the media’s sordid designation of Wuornos as an unrepentant monster—in the midst of the horrors and pathologies, first-time writer-director Patty Jenkins unearths an unlikely love story between two misfits. Nearing suicidal despair, Wuornos wanders into a Florida bar, where she meets Selby Wall (Christina Ricci), a young woman sent by her parents to live with an aunt in order to “cure her homosexuality.” Wuornos—victim of a tragic, abusive upbringing—quickly falls in love, and clings to Selby like a life preserver. Unable to find a legitimate job but desperate to sustain her relationship with Selby, Wuornos continues working as a prostitute. When one of her johns turns violent, Wuornos shoots the man in self-defense; the first in her tragic string of killings. Shot in many of the actual locations where Wuornos committed her crimes between 1989-90, in its grittiness, verisimilitude, and hard-won empathy for its antihero, Monster is reminiscent of the great, iconoclastic American films of the ‘60s and ‘70s. Co-starring Bruce Dern, Monster succeeds as searing social commentary, road movie, and, most profoundly, as love story. Theron’s ferocious, fully-committed work—astounding physical transformation matched by unerring psychological acuity—is sure to surprise audiences familiar with her work, and in writer-director Jenkins, Monster heralds a major new filmmaking talent. -- © Newmarket Films [More]
Starring: Charlize Theron, Christina Ricci, Bruce Dern, Scott Wilson
Starring: Charlize Theron, Christina Ricci, Bruce Dern, Scott Wilson, Pruitt Taylor Vince, Annie Corley, Lee Tergesen
Director: Patty Jenkins
Director: Patty Jenkins
Screenwriter: Patty Jenkins
Producer: Charlize Theron, Matt Damon, Clark Peterson, Donald Kushner, Brad Wyman
Composer: BT
Studio: Newmarket Films
Reviews for Monster
For all the great work that goes into it, Monster gives no reason to invest any time trying to understand why this pathetic person took seven lives.
Digging deep down, Theron and the movie give us empty lives, desperate romance and murderous rage. They bring a monster to life.
Isn't entirely the movie it could be but, as is, it's still compelling.
Although truly painful to watch at times, Monster nonetheless deserves to be seen, if only for Theron's startling tour-de-force performance.
Theron, a princípio, parece uma espécie de 'Gollum de saias': sabemos que não estamos vendo algo real, mas não conseguimos deixar de acreditar em sua existência.
Is Monster about Wuornos' transformation into a serial killer, or Theron's transformation into Wuornos?
An at-once horrifying and touching love story about the disenfranchised on whom society turns its back -- a segment of the population not portrayed often enough on film.
A fine showcase for Theron's powerhouse performance, but in comparison to the great true-crime pictures of the past, it comes up short.
Theron sacrifices her body, her image, and her soul to give what may be the most stunning transformation ever to take place in any movie.
Phony choppers and a startling resemblance to Jon Voight aren't enough to transform Theron into Wuornos, and I didn't buy either the performance or the character for a second.
Constantly, almost pathologically, making excuses and rationalizations for the brutal murderess.
Charlize Theron's anguish-in-the-raw is the stuff that Oscars are made of.
Because the film filters everything else out but Theron/Wuornos, the performance becomes the end-all, be-all of the film.
almost despicably lazy storytelling... Director / screenwriter Patty Jenkins has tried to humanize a despicable person, and she is completely ineffective at doing that.
Charlize Theron pours herself into the body and mind of serial killer Aileen Wuornos in Patty Jenkins' devastating directing debut.
Charlize Theron has always had the chops...but to date few in Hollywood have seen past her looks. That's about to change.
Heavier, with bad teeth and blotchy skin, Theron is nearly unrecognizable in the role. She's also astonishingly good.
Latest News for Monster
January 12, 2006:
Theron Gets Ready to Produce Some "Ice"
According to Variety, the lovely Ms. Charlize Theron is about to reunite with the producer behind "Monster" to deliver "The Ice at the Bottom of the World,"... More...
April 25, 2005:
"Blair Witch" Director to be "Altered" by Rogue Pictures
More...
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